I’d grab your neck if you wanted me to, but you would never know itI got a car and you’d just be my girl but you don’t wanna click itWhen ya gonna start looking at me, yeah?My apologies for being 5 feet, yeah

It’s not pain if it’s productive in practiceIt’s not pain if it makes you feel ferventIt’s not pain, I said it’s not pain, I said it’s not pain, noIt’s not pain if it makes you feel right

I’m covered up, stifled by that lazy suffocating handSaid I would talk, but you’re messing around and saying that I can’t

Video:

I performed this song with my band in Columbus, OH on tour in April 2018 at probably my favorite venue on tour - Woodland's Tavern. Amazing lights and sound! This performance has an intro called 'Youth Shot' - from my earlier EP.

ORIGINAL DEMOS:

Here's the original demo from 2016.

Here is the piece from which the drum part was sampled!

Journal Entry #3: I used to be so self conscious about my height

I'm 5'5. The average height of an American male is 5'9. I am what you'd call remarkably short.

This used to bother me to no end. I used to think I was inferior to the girls I dated, who always were maybe half an inch taller than me. I became such a toxic brat about my height, especially between the ages of 16 and 22.

It was the root of so many problems that I didn't realize at the time. I felt that it contributed to a boyish-ness about me that made me notably less powerful and attractive to those around me. To compensate, I'd let my anger and bitterness speak louder. I'd be snarkier, ruder - I'd flaunt my intellect, trying to showcase the ways that I'm more powerful than my 'manlier' counterparts.

While this sounds noble, it mostly just made me come off as an asshole. When you're not secure with yourself, toxicity comes to the forefront. Owning your strengths in that context becomes more of an immature stab rather than a composed wielding of confidence.

I started to get over this in the summer of 2012. I just decided it was time to better myself. I started running 4 times a week, recording a lot of music, keeping a journal, reading a lot of sociology books, and going on a lot of trips. It really helped.

Since then I just decided 'fuck it'. That was the first time that I really knew who I was and knew my worth.

The lyric 'In what timeline...' was a thought I'd always dwell over regarding my height. I liked this realllllly tall girl in college, and we were good friends. But when I revealed I liked her, she told me that she liked all of these great things about me that no other guy has, but didn't like me in a romantic sense. All I could think about was - if I was taller, all of these traits you mention would amount to a romantic attraction, but my height imposes a mental block on you seeing me that way. It's a totally manipulative and unfair way of thinking, but that's the toxicity of having such a strong insecurity. Ever since then I viewed my height in the context of alternate timelines. Like - if there were a parallel universe where everything was the same about me except my height, you would be romantically interested in me.

It's totally useless to think about these things...

Anyway. The song kind of flips that dwelling on its head uses that concept to say 'get over yourself, I'm cool as fuck!' Haha. This song was totally just a playground for me to get out all of my confidence in a way that empowered me. The sassy synth rock atmosphere of the tune I found to be really complimentary to that goal.

I kind of always pictured a "The Fonz"-esque character singing this song.

The funny thing about all this is as soon as you stop letting it bother you, no one else thinks about it either. Sometimes this past insecurity will come up in conversation, and almost universally the people I talk to will say "I NEVER thought about you as short" or "I never even knew you were a shorter guy." Fake it 'til you make it!